Iona welcomes stay-at-home mum poll

“The State should not favour one particular childcare choice over another ... The State should allocate resources in such a way as to financially support the various choices parents want to make about the care of their children during the day.”

David Quinn, Director, The Iona Institute

The Irish government is badly out of step with public opinion on equal financial support for stay-at-home mothers, the Iona Institute Director David Quinn has stated.

He was responding to an Irish Daily Mail poll that has shown that 65 per cent of people surveyed think that parents who give up work to raise their children should receive the same level of financial support, or more, than those who go out to work and use crèches and other childcare facilities.

Speaking about that poll published on the front page on 23 August 2017 and CSO* figures he said: “The poll shows that the government is badly out of step with public opinion on this issue. While Taoiseach Leo Varadkar indicated earlier this week that the government also supports home care, all the indications are that institutional day care will be heavily favoured in the next budget.”

Currently only parents who send their children to Tusla approved/registered crèches can avail of incentives of up to €7,500. Neither stay-at-home parents nor their relatives can avail of this support, though they can avail of a tax credit of just over €1,000.

David Quinn stated that if the government does not heed public opinion, then Fianna Fáil and the other opposition parties ought to.

“The State should not favour one particular childcare choice over another, in this case institutional day care. The State should allocate resources in such a way as to financially support the various choices parents want to make about the care of their children during the day,” he said.

The Ireland Thinks Poll for the Irish Daily Mail revealed that 51 per cent of those surveyed think that stay-at-home mothers should get the same financial support as those who go out to work; 14 per cent think they should get more; 20 per cent think they should get less; and 16 per cent did not know. (The figures came to 101 per cent due to rounding.)

Based on political allegiance, 59 per cent of Fianna Fáil supporters surveyed said stay-at-home mothers should get the same financial support and 20 per cent said that they should get more, with 21 per cent stating they should get less. Of Fine Gael supporters, 58 per cent said stay-at-home mothers should get the same financial support and 13 per cent said they should get more, while 29 per cent said they should get less.

Writing exclusively in the Irish Independent earlier in the week, Taoiseach Leo Varadkar stated that the government plans to provide greater parental leave, increase home care supports and invest in after-school care.

The Stay-At-Home Parents Association also welcomed the poll findings, saying the findings did not surprise them and that all children and parents should be treated equally.

*A recent CSO study found that 70 per cent of parents mind their pre-school and primary school children at home, while only 13 per cent use day care. It also found that 82 per cent are happy with their current choice.